Waubgeshig Rice is a CBC reporter in Ottawa. He is also a huge music fan of all things heavy. Rice writes about music on his personal blog, among other things. So when CBC Music saw his recent post on an article he wrote five years ago, we gave the album a listen to and thought yeah, let’s turn people onto it and open up the debate around cultural tribute versus cultural appropriation. What do you think?
Here’s Rice:
One of my favourite albums of the last decade or so has been Tomahawk's Anonymous. To sum it up in a sentence, it’s a collection comprised mostly of contemporary arrangements of traditional Sioux and Apache songs. I was listening to it on a drive back from the rez on the weekend and was reminded that I wrote a little article on it back in 2007 for Spirit Magazine. Here it is.
The way Duane Denison sees it, Tomahawk was a kind of bizarre rock ’n’ roll destiny.
“We didn’t intend to end up here – a band of white guys called ‘Tomahawk’ playing rock versions of powwow music,” he says with a laugh on the phone from his home in Nashville, Tenn. “We just picked the name because it sounded aggressive.”
But it was an almost ancient aggression that inspired Tomahawk’s third album, Anonymous: 13 tracks that explore traditional Native American songs with a more contemporary rock treatment. The result is a modern interpretation of some of the darker and more haunting traditional melodies and beats from the North American southwest through heavier, more intricate percussion, guitars and complex vocal samples.
It’s an idea Tomahawk guitarist Denison had been kicking around since 2000, after touring as a guitarist for Hank Williams III on the reservation casino circuit across the American southwest. “I was a little disappointed with some of the native bands I was seeing in some of those communities,” he says. “They were usually very conventional, kind of blues- and country-type stuff, or too much like ‘new age’ music. I figured there must be native music somewhere that was more aggressive, spookier and more kinetic.”
After doing some research, Denison (formerly of the Jesus Lizard) found some historical music books that dated back to the early 1900s, with transcriptions of traditional Sioux and Apache ceremonial music. He was blown away.
“I couldn’t believe how meticulously transcribed these songs were – right down to tempo and key changes,” Denison says. “The music just sat in these books for decades and decades. There were no recordings; no listening reference to learn from. I was just really interested in the way they sounded.”
So Denison got together with drummer John Stanier (formerly of Helmet) in Nashville, and the two worked on some demos. They then sent the guitar and drum tracks to vocalist Mike Patton (of Mr. Bungle, Faith No More and Fantomas fame) in San Francisco. The original idea was to use the tracks as interludes and segues on a new Tomahawk album, which was supposed to be a straight-up rock record like the band’s first two releases.
“I played it for Mike, and he thought it sounded amazing,” says Denison. “He said we should try to make a whole album out of these songs.”
What resulted was an eclectic and intriguing collection of songs on what became Anonymous. Heavy beats that drive straight forward, then wildly stray; guitar and vocal melodies that are both haunting and beautiful. “Mescal Rite 1″ is a concise marriage of guitar, vocals and heavy beats based on a rhythmically complex chant that seems almost universal, i.e. something you’d hear at any powwow across North America. “Cradle Song,” meanwhile, is an ambient, chilly departure that’s much more contemporary, with lyrics in English. And “Sun Dance” is probably the most “rock” in nature, but the vocals make it almost ancestral.
“I’ve always been worried that our approach might offend some native people,” says Denison. “But we wanted to be as respectful and true to these traditional songs as possible. The bottom line is, we want to make music that sounds good.” He says the “Anonymous” title pays tribute to the countless individuals who contributed to these songs, but went uncredited throughout history.
“This music belongs to everybody, and I’m really fortunate and honoured to have been able to play it.”
Related:
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